July 13, 2008
Enabling Tyranny—Brigitte Bardot And Other Victims
By Paul Craig Roberts

I recently read that
Brigitte Bardot, now in her 70s, has been arrested
as a hate criminal for complaining that Muslims in
France slaughter sheep without first stunning them. The
famous actress is
known for her sympathy with animals, but the French
government preferred to interpret her remarks as hatred
for Muslims. Prosecutor Anne de Fontette promised to
throw the book at Bardot.[Brigitte
Bardot in race hate row, Daily Telegraph,
(London) April 18, 2008]
There are many incongruities here.
The French are
persecuting one of their own for taking exception to
the practices of an
alien culture. But then, perhaps this is just being
broad-minded. What really jumps out is: if Bardot’s
animal rights position makes her a hate criminal, what
does French President Nicholas Sarkozy’s foreign policy
position make him?
According to Information Clearing
House’s
running tally as of July 12, 1,236,604 Iraqis have
been slaughtered as a result of the Sarkozy-supported US
invasion and occupation of Iraq. If Bardot is a hate
criminal under French law for complaining about how
Muslims prepare their mutton, why isn’t
President Sarkozy a hate criminal for supporting an
American policy that has resulted in the deaths of
1,236,604 Muslims and the displacement of 4 million
Iraqis?
Such incongruities are everywhere.
It is as if people are no longer capable of thought.
Last week the US Congress passed an
ex post facto law that legalized the illegal behavior of
telecommunication companies that enabled the Bush Regime
to violate US law and
to spy on Americans without warrants. Retroactive
laws are unconstitutional. But, alas, the US
Constitution does not make campaign contributions, and
telecommunication companies do.
The Bush Regime claimed that its
illegal behavior, which requires an unconstitutional
retroactive law to protect telecommunication companies
and President Bush from being held accountable, is
necessary to protect us. But as our Founding Fathers
and every intelligent patriotic person since has
patiently explained to the American public, it is the
Constitution that protects us. No safety can be found
by fleeing the Constitution.
Without the Constitution we have no
protection. We simply stand naked before unbridled
government power.
That’s pretty much how we stand now
after 7.5 years of the Bush Regime. Electing a
Democratic Congress in 2006 did not make any
difference. Indeed, it was a Democratic majority
Congress that last week gave Bush his unconstitutional
ex post facto law.
As Larry Stratton and I point out
in the new edition of Tyranny,
the US Constitution has no friends. The
Democrats don’t like the
Second Amendment (another incongruity in the face of
the right-wing police state that Bush has created), and
the Brownshirt Republicans regard the rest of our civil
liberties as coddling devices for criminals and
terrorists.
Across the political spectrum,
Americans are happy to shred the Constitution in behalf
of some agenda or the other.
The government is happy to oblige,
because shredding the Constitution removes constraints
on the government’s power.
It has fallen to the private,
member-supported organization known as the
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) to challenge
the retroactive law that destroys the privacy rights
granted to US citizens by the Constitution. The ACLU is
regarded by conservatives as a Jewish conspiracy to
destroy Christianity, and the right-wing idiots on Fox
“News” and talk radio will denounce the ACLU for
wanting to empower terrorists.
Conservatives will repeat endlessly
that Americans who are doing nothing wrong have nothing
to fear. If this argument held any water, there would
have been no point in the
Founding Fathers writing the Constitution.
The position of the US Government
is that the rights granted Americans by the Constitution
facilitate terrorism. To be safe from terrorists, the
argument goes, we must allow the government to take
liberties with the Constitution. This argument gives
government the power to set aside the Constitution, and,
thus, enables tyranny. As Milton Friedman and many
others taught us, rules are the essence of freedom, and
discretionary power is the essence of tyranny.
Bush’s “war on terror,”
essentially a hoax, has transformed the United States
into a lawless nation. We are not lawless in the sense
of an absence of laws. We are lawless in the sense that
despite a surfeit of laws, we no longer have the rule of
law.
If the President doesn’t like an
existing law, he ignores it. If the President doesn’t
like new laws passed by Congress, instead of vetoing
them he prepares a “signing statement,” which
says that he will determine what the law means.
This lawlessness has spread from
the top of the federal government down to local
governments and community associations. Recently the
state of Georgia passed a law that reaffirmed that
anyone with a carry permit was entitled to have their
concealed weapon when
dropping off or picking up passengers at the Atlanta
airport. The
Atlanta city government said it would not obey the
state law and would arrest anyone, including the state
legislator who sponsored the legislation, who carried a
permitted weapon onto airport property. [Airport’s
Ban on Guns Is Disputed in Atlanta
, By John Sullivan, New York Times,July
2, 2008]
A community in which I live has
by-laws that forbid members of the board of the property
owners association from serving as general manager of
the designated community. This did not prevent the
board from appointing one of their own the general
manager. The POA board regards the by-laws which govern
it as merely words without force.
Just like Bush regards the US
Constitution.
Paul Craig Roberts [email
him] was Assistant
Secretary of the Treasury during President Reagan’s
first term. He was Associate Editor of the Wall
Street Journal. He has held numerous academic
appointments, including the William E. Simon Chair,
Center for Strategic and International Studies,
Georgetown University, and Senior Research Fellow,
Hoover Institution, Stanford University. He was awarded
the Legion of Honor by French President Francois
Mitterrand. He is the author of
Supply-Side Revolution : An Insider's Account of
Policymaking in Washington;
Alienation
and the Soviet Economy and
Meltdown: Inside the Soviet Economy,
and is the co-author
with Lawrence M. Stratton of
The Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and
Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name
of Justice. Click
here for Peter
Brimelow’s Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts
about the recent epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.